Fused junction semiconductor devices



y 1963 A. WANNLUND, JR., ETAL 3,088,856

FUSED JUNCTION SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES Original Filed Sept. 2, 1955 ARTHUR LIWANNLUND 1/2.,

WARREN R names,

INVENTORS 5y WWW ATTORNEY trite The present invention relates to semiconductor devices and, more particularly to fused junction semiconductor signal translating devices.

The present application is a divisional application of copending United States Patent application entitled, Fused Junction Semiconductor Devices and Method of Making the Same, by Warren P. Waters and Arthur L. Wannlund, Serial Number 532,324, filed September 2, 1955, now abandoned.

In the semiconductor art, a region of semiconductor material containing an excess of donor impurities and having an excess of free electrons is considered to be an N-type region, While a P-type region is one containing an excess of acceptor impurities resulting in a deficit of electrons or, stated differently, an excess of holes. When a continuous solid specimen of semiconductor material has an N-typc region adjacent a P-type region, the boundary between the two regions is termed a P-N (or N-P) junction and the specimen of semiconductor material is termed a P-N junction semiconductor device. Such a P-N junction device may be used as a rectifier. A specimen having two N-type regions separated by a P-type region, for example, is termed an N-P-N junction semiconductor device or transistor, while a specimen having two P-type regions separated by an N-type region is termed a P-N-P junction semiconductor device or transistor.

The term semiconductor materi-a as utilized herein is considered generic to germanium, silicon and alloys of germanium and silicon, and is employed to distinguish these semiconductors from metallic oxide semiconductors consisting essentially of chemical compounds.

The term active impurity is used .to denote those impurities which affect the electrical rectification characteristic of semiconductor material as distinguishable from other impurities which have no appreciable effect upon these characteristics. Active impurities are ordinarily classified either as donor impurities, such as phosphorus, arsenic and antimony, or as acceptor impurities, such as boron, aluminum, gallium and indium.

The term solvent meta is used in this specification to describe those metals which when in the liquid state become solvents for the semiconductor material which is under consideration and will, therefore, dissolve areas of semiconductor material which are in contact with the solvent metal. A solvent metal may be a primary element or it may be an alloy. Any solvent metal may be used which will precipitate some atoms of the dissolved semiconductor material upon the remaining undissolved portion of the semiconductor material.

In the prior art method of producing a fused P-N junction in a semiconductor body, a metal specimen, ordinarily in pellet form, containing a solvent metal and including either an acceptor or a donor impurity is melted or fused onto one surface of a heated semiconductor body forming a molten drop which dissolves a small portion of the body, the dissolved portion of the semiconductor body forming an alloy solution wit-h the molten metal specimen. Ordinarily the metal specimen has a relatively low melting point or at least a low eutectic temperature with the semiconductor material, this being desirable so Patented May 7, 1963 that fusion can be effected readily without raising the temperature of the semiconductor body to values that might injure the electrical characteristics of the semiconductor body. To form the junction region, the as sembly which comprises the semiconductor body and the drop of molten solvent metal is allowed to cool to cause precipitation of the dissolved semiconductor together with some atoms of the active impurity to form a regrown crystal region of opposite conductivity type to that of the parent crystal.

As is well known to those skilled in the art, however, the fusion techniques heretofore known to the art, such as the one described above, have several inherent limitations which in turn limit the production of fused junction semiconductor devices. For example, the practice of the above method is restricted to the use of solvent metals which are fairly soft in the solid state and/ or which do not differ greatly in their thermal coeflicients of expansion from that of the semiconductor material. If solvent metals which do not satisfy these criteria are used, the parent crystal is usually cracked or crazed at the junction region by the alloy button as it solidifies, which seriously impairs the electrical characteristics of the final semi conductor crystal device.

Various methods have been used in the prior art for forming P-N junctions in the manner described above. For example, alloy buttons may be formed by fusing by hand in a small furnace a wire of solvent metal or of an alloy containing an active impurity into the semiconductor wafer. In practice, in the making of P-N-P germanium transistors, for example, this is commonly done by using jigs to position the germanium body while indium in the form of pellets or a wire is brought into contact with the surface of the germanium after the surface of the germanium has been raised to a temperature above the eutectic temperature of germanium-indium alloy. The placement of the germanium-indium alloy which is formed is controlled by the position of the jig. In the formation of large-area fused junction devices, it has been difiicult by methods of the prior art to define the junction area and its position in the semiconductor crystal. Various methods of defining the fusion area have been attempted, including the method by which a small layer of gold is first applied to the surface of the semiconductor wafer upon which the junction area is to be formed. By this method the area of the gold layer is defined by plating techniques well known to the art and corresponds to the area upon which the fused junction is to be formed. This layer of gold gives a region upon the semiconductor crystal surface which the alloy being used to form the P-N junction will preferentially wet during the fusion cycle. This method, however, has not proven satisfactory due to the difficulties encountered in quantity production.

In relation to the formation of P-N junctions in the semiconductor art, indium on germanium and gold on silicon have been classified as high penetration alloys since they dissolve a considerable amount of the semiconductor body at the required temperature and redeposit a relatively thick regrown region upon cooling. Lead alloys on germanium and tin alloys on silicon, for example, have been classified as low penetration alloys due to a sharp rise in the solubility of the alloys in the semiconductor at temperatures which are lower than those required to cause dissolution by the high penetration alloys.

Although the fusion process described above and the other improved fusion processes known to the art have been eminently successful for producing P-N junctions, they have the serious limitation that they cannot produce a large-area fused junction. The reasons for the limitation in area of the fused junction produced by these fusion processes are well known to those skilled in the art. Primarily, these difficulties arise from the fact that in fusing a pellet of alloy metal to the parent semiconductor crystal, the substantial thickness of the pellet creates strains which in turn may cause crazing and fissures in the semiconductor crystal body if the area covered by the pellet is excessive.

A method of producing very broad area P-N junctions in semiconductor bodies has been disclosed and claimed in the copending application of Joseph Maserjian, filed February 2, 1955, Serial No. 4905599, entitled Evaporation-Fused Junction Semiconductor Devices, now Patent Number 2,789,068, and assigned to the assignee of the present application. The method of the Maserjian application comprises the steps of heating a semiconductor crystal body of a predetermined conductivity type to a temperature above the eutectic temperature of the semiconductor crystal body and the solvent metal which is being used to form the fused junction; evaporating a mass of the solvent metal including an active impurity of the type which will convert the body to the desired conductivity type onto the. surface of the semiconductor body to form a molten layer of substantial thickness of the solvent metal upon the surface of the semiconductor body and to dissolve a layer of the surface in the molten layer of solvent metal; and cooling the semiconductor body to cause the dissolved semiconductor material to precipitate, together with some atoms of the active impurity, upon the semiconductor body to form an integral regrown crystal region of opposite conductivity type to the semiconductor body.

The method of the Maserjian application yields excellent results and forms high quality large area fused P-N junctions. Where it is not desirable to form a fused P-N junction over the complete surface area of the semiconductor wafer, it is necessary to define the region over which the junction area is to be formed. In doing this, various difiiculties are encountered. For example, in the formation of a transistor, it is desirable that the collector junction have an area greater than the emitter junction.

In order to define these areas, various methods have been.

developed. However, if high penetration alloys are used, it is difficult to control the amount of penetration and the accuracy of the temperature cycle is quite critical. If plating, such as the gold plating described above, is used to control the area of penetration, it is diflicult to plate on the etched surface which is required for the fusion process and gold plating in particular does not yield satisfactory results for low penetration alloys. The low penetra-tion alloys require semiconductor wafers having very (thin base regions which the alloy button does not completely cover, making the resulting device quite weak and the base region resistances extremely high. The thin resulting regrown region also results in short leakage paths across its surface.

Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide fused P-N junctions in semiconductor devices which have accurately controlled physical dimensions.

It is another object of the present invention to provide fused junction semiconductor devices in which the physical location of the fused junction is accurately positioned.

It is another object of the present invention to provide fused P-N junctions in semiconductor bodies with a largearea regrown crystal region of controlled thickness and configuration.

It is a further object of the present invention to provide fused junction semiconductor devices which have a relatively large-area exposed surface of the regrown crystal region.

Itis a further object of the present invention to provide fused junction semiconductor devices in which the P-N junction is below the surface plane of the semiconductor crystal body.

The preferred method of forming the device of the present invention comprises the steps of forming a pit, having a predetermined configuration, in a surface of a semiconductor crystal body; depositing molten solvent metal which may include an-active impurity at least in the 4 pit; cooling the semiconductor body and solvent metal; and removing the solidified layer of solvent metal, and the regrown crystal region which has been formed, from the surface of the semiconductor body, whereby a regrown crystal region having a configuration similar to the contfiggration of the pit remains within the semiconductor The novel features which are believed to be characteristic of the invention, both as to its organization and method of operation, together with further objects and advantages thereof, will be better understood from the fol lowing description considered in connection with the -ac companying drawing in which an embodiment of the invention is illustrated by way of example. It is to be expressly understood, however, that the drawing is for the purpose of illustration and description only and is not intended as a definition of the limits of the invention.

FIG. 1 is a sectional schematic diagram of a semiconduct-or crystal body in which a pit has been formed;

FIG. 2 is a sectional schematic diagram of the semiconductor crystal body of FIG. 1 after the regrown crystal region has been formed;

FIG. 3 is a sectional schematic diagram of the semiconductor body of FIG. 2 after the excessive solvent metal and regrown crystal region have been removed, showing the completed fused P-N junction;

FIG. 4 is a sectional schematic diagram of a semiconductor crystal body corresponding to FIG. 2 but in which a collector and emitter P-N junction are formed in the production of a transistor; and

FIG. 5 is the transistor crystal body of FIG. 4 showing the completed emitter and collector P-N junction areas.

Referring now to the drawing wherein like reference characters designate like or corresponding parts throughout the several figures, there is shown in FIG. 1 a semiconductor crystal wafer 10 in which a pit 11 has been formed as the initial step of the method of the present invention for forming P-N junctions. For purposes of illustration, the method of the present invention will be described with respect to the production of a fused silicon P-N junction in which the semiconductor crystal body is N-type silicon, while theregrown crystal region is P-type. It Will be recognized, however, that the method described herein may also be employed for producing fused P-N junctions in germanium and silicon-germanium alloys, and also for producing P-N junctions in silicon, germanium and silicon-germanium alloys, in which the semiconductor crystal body is P-type and the regrown region is N-type.

In producing a fused P-N junction in silicon by the method of the present invention, aluminum is preferably used as a combined solvent metal and active impurity. In addition to being an acceptor impurity, aluminum allows a wide tolerance in the temperatures used in the method and exhibits very little diffusion in the silicon, thereby providing a clearly-defined P-N junction. Although aluminum is used as a combined solvent metal and active impurity in the present embodiment, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that other solvent metals, for example, gold, platinum, silver and tin, may be used when combined with the proper active impurity. The solvent metal may be a primary element or an alloy which has a relatively low melting point or at least a low eutectic temperature with the semiconductor material, and must be a metal capable of forming a eutectic alloy with the silicon or germanium or an alloy of the two which is used as the semiconductor material. The active impurities which may be used in the present method are those ordinarily classified either as donor impurities, including phosphorus, arsenic and antimony, or as acceptor impurities, including aluminum, gallium, boron and indium. The solvent metals and active impurities will be determined by the conductivity type of the crystal region to be regrown. For example, an alloy of gold and antimony may be used for N-type regrown regions on P-type bodies. Further, although aluminum when used as a solvent metal for silicon is classified as a high penetration alloy, as described hereinabove, the method of the present invention may be practiced with equally good results when using a low penetration alloy such as, for example, lead as a solvent metal for germanium, and tin as a solvent metal for silicon.

Referring again to FIG. 1, the N-type silicon body is preferably a silicon single crystal which has been cut to a slab of predetermined thickness and which has been crystallographically oriented so that its upper surface 12 and lower surface 13, as viewed in FIG. 1, are the 111) surface planes of the crystal. The semiconductor body may be of any desired area. Crystallographic orientation of the specimen is not necessary but is desirable to promote the growth of planar P-N junctions Within the specimen during the fusion operation which will be described hereinafter. At the present, it appears to be preferable to employ the (111) surface plane for carrying out the method of this invention, the theory being that the relatively high atomic density of the crystal in this particular plane permits better control of subsequent operations. It should be pointed out, however, that other relatively dense crystallographic surface planes, such as the (110), (100), and (112) planes, may be employed satisfactorily in carrying out the method of this invention.

As an example of the method of the present invention, the manufacture of a single high current-carrying diode will be described in which a square silicon wafer having a width of approximately 45 of an inch and a thickness of the order of 25 mils is used. The silicon semiconductor body 10 is lapped to the predetermined thickness of .025 of an inch, to remove surface damage produced by the cutting operation and to provide a specimen of uniform thickness. One commercially available lapping compound which has been satisfactorily employed for performing lapping operations is 302 mesh Alundum abrasive.

A pit 11 or cavity is then formed in the surface of the silicon wafer by sandblasting or other means known to the art. In the present embodiment, the pit 11 has a depth of the order of 3 mils and a diameter at the surface of the order of 45 mils. It should be noted that by the method of forming the pit, the configuration of the pit 11 is slightly frusto-conical with smooth sloping sides 14 and a fiat smooth bottom surface 15 of circular outline. Although the method of forming the pit is not critical to the method of the present invention, excellent results have been achieved by directing a high pressure stream of abrasive particles, such as finely-divided aluminum oxide against the surface of the silicon wafer. Abrasive particles of closely-controlled particle size may be used to form the cutting stream. In the presently preferred embodiment, commercially available abrasive, such as S5. White Airbrasive Powder No. 1, which is aluminum oxide having an average particle size of 27 microns is especially suitable. Commercially available devices which provide a mixture of the abrasive particles in a dry inert gas stream give excellent results.

After formation of the pit 11 the silicon wafer is preferably etched in any one of several suitable etchants known to the art to remove surface damage and imperfections. The etching step may be carried out, for example, by immersing the semiconductor body for thirty seconds in a solution containing equal parts of nitric acid, hydrofluoric acid and acetic acid. The wafer is then rinsed in distilled water followed by a second rinse in absolute methyl alcohol.

A molten layer 16 of solvent metal is then deposited upon the semiconductor body 10 in order to fill the pit 11 and cover the surface as shown in FIG. 2. Although the molten solvent metal may be deposited within the pit and, if desired, upon the surface of the silicon body by other methods known to the art, the method disclosed and claimed in the copending application of Maserjian, supra, is found to be particularly advantageous and to yield excellent and reproducible results. Therefore, in this illustrative embodiment, a quantity of aluminum is evaporated from a tungsten filament onto the surface of the silicon wafer which has been previously raised to a temperature of the order of 800 C. within an evacuated chamber. After the molten aluminum has been deposited, the silicon body is allowed to cool at a controlled cooling rate toa temperature of the order of C. and is then allowed to cool by uncontrolled cooling to room temperature.

In forming the P-N junction by the evaporation of aluminum onto the silicon surface, it is important to determine and control: the temperature of the surface of the semiconductor body; the amount of the molten aluminum evaporated into the pit; and the rate of deposition of aluminum onto .the silicon body. The rate of cooling after evaporation and fusion is not critical to the same degree as are the above parameters. However, for optimum use of the method and to obtain reproducible uniform quality of junctions, the rate of cooling should be controlled and should be substantially constant.

The amount of semiconductor material which will be dissolved by the molten metal is dependent upon the quantity of molten metal present in the pit and upon the surface of the semiconductor body, and the temperature of the semiconductor body. The amount of semiconductor material which will be dissolved by a predetermined amount or weight of a solvent metal at a given temperature can be readily determined by referring to the binary phase diagram for the alloy of the semiconductor material and the solvent metal, such as those which appear in the Metals Reference Book, by Smithalls, published by New York Interscience Publishers Inc. (1949 edition). From the binary phase diagram for aluminum-silicon alloy, it may be seen that the range of fusion temperatures at which the present method is operable must be between the eutectic temperature of aluminum-silicon which is 577 C. and the melting point of silicon which is 1420 C. The deposition of a layer of molten aluminum upon the surface of a silicon crystal which has a surface temperature of 600 C. will dissolve an amount of silicon equal in Weight to approximately 14 percent of the weight of the aluminum. At 800 C. dissolved silicon will constitute about 28 percent of the weight of the molten aluminum which is in phase equilibrium with the solid silicon body. For example, at 800 C. the regrown crystal region will be 0.3 times the Volume of the molten aluminum evaporated into the jig and onto the silicon surface, while at 900 C. it will be nearly 0.5 times. Thus, in the presently preferred embodiment in which a pit having a depth of 3 mils is used and in which sufficient molten aluminum is deposited to cover the surface to a depth of 1 mil above the surface 12, a regrown region 17 which is 0.3 mil at the surface 12, approximately 1.5 mils at the pit surface 15, and approximately 1.0 mil surrounding the pit walls 14 is formed.

It has been found in practicing the method of the present invention that a temperature range between 700 C. and 900 C. is preferable when aluminum is used as a combined solvent metal and active impurty with a silicon body. Above the temperature of 900 C. penetration of the molten aluminum into the solid silicon body is rapid and excessive, causing difficulty in control and decrease in the lifetime of the carriers at the junction, which results in a decrease in forward current possible through the junction.

When aluminum is deposited in the pit and onto the surface by evaporation, the rate of evaporation of the solvent metal and active impurity is also a critical parameter. At a relatively high temperature of fusion, i.e., 800 C., the rate of evaporation is less critical than at a fusion temperature near the eutectic point of the semiconductor material and solvent metal alloy since the rate of penetration is greater at the higher temperature. The rate of evaporation may be easily determined in view of what has been discussed hereinbefore by routine experiment for particular solvent metals by one skilled in the art. In using aluminum and silicon, a rate of evaporation of less than .001 mil per second and fusion temperatures below 800 C. will not yield satisfactory results, while obviously there is no upper limit on the evaporation rate.

The depth of the pit which may be used in carrying out the method of the present invention is dependent only upon the amount of solvent metal which may be uniformly deposited or placed in the pit and upon the limits which have been given hereinbefore for the amount of solvent metal which must be present in order to form a P-N junction. Cavities varying in width from mils to 100 mils and in depth from 1 mil to 10 mils have been successfully used.

Referring now to FIGS. 2 and 3, FIG. 2 illustrates schematically the formation of the P-N junction within the semiconductor body which is obtained by the method described above. Since the temperature of the silicon surface is above the eutectic temperature for aluminumsilicon alloy, molten aluminum deposited into the pit and, if desired, upon the surface will dissolve a substantial portion of the silicon with which it is in contact. As the silicon body is allowed to cool, the solubility of the silicon in the molten aluminum decreases and, as a result, some of the dissolved silicon, together with some atoms of the aluminum which acts as the acceptor active impurity, begins to precipitate out of the liquid aluminum-silicon solution, depositing preferentially on the parent N-type silicon body It to form a regrown P-type silicon region 17. As the temperature is further decreased, the remainder of the aluminum and dissolved silicon solidifies as a layer of eutectic aluminum-silicon alloy 16 which is ohmically connected to the P-type regrown region 17. The P-type regrown region follows the configuration of the pit H which was formed in the surface of the semiconductor body and will cover that portion of the surface upon which the molten aluminum was deposited.

After the fusion cycle is complete and the regrown crystal region 17 has been formed as shown in FIG. 2, the layer of .alloy 16 and regrown crystal upon the surface 12 of the semiconductor crystal body, if any is present, are removed as illustrated in FIG. 3. In the presently preferred embodiment, the upper surface 12 of the silicon body 10 upon which the aluminum has beenevaporated is placed with the alloy surface down upon a lapping plate, and the aluminum alloy layer 16 and the thin junction layer 17 formed along the surface area 12 of the silicon body are removed by hand or mechanical lapping with a fine 800 grit abrasive. Referring to FIG. 3, this produces a small circle of aluminum-silicon alloy 16 surrounded by a regrow crystal region 17 which in turn forms a P-N junction 18 with the silicon body 10. The surface area 12 of the semiconductor body then comprises. a surface region of N-type silicon, a ring of P-type silicon and a circular area of aluminum-silicon alloy. Since the regrown crystal region is trapezoidal as viewed in cross section, it is an added advantage that the regrown regionmeets the surface of the semiconductor body at an angle and that the lapping cuts across the regrown region 17 along a diagonal which increases its width at the surface of the semiconductor body.

,The semiconductor body is then etched to clean off various surface imperfections and damage which may have been produced and a semiconductor diode is completed by methods well known to the art, i.e. an electrode is afiixed to thealuminuml-silicon alloy area, an ohmic contact is formed on the lower surface, an electrode is afiixed thereto and the assembly may be encapsulated.

From the foregoing it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that the volume and configuration of the pit which is formed in the surface of the semiconductor body will be dependent upon the configuration and size of the regrown crystal region and P-N junction which are desired. When the semiconductor material is dissolved by the molten solvent metal and precipitated upon cooling, the P-N junction is formed at the surface Where dissolution ended and precipitation began. The P-N junction which is formed, therefore, has a configuration similar to the configuration of the pit which was originally formed, but defines a volume which is larger than the original volume of the pit by an amount equal to the volume of semiconductor material which was dissolved. Similarly, the inner surface of the regrown crystal region has a configuration substantially similar to the original configuration of the pit and defines a volume which is substantially equal to, but greater than, the volume of the pit by an amount equal to the amount of semiconductor material which remains in the aluminum to form the volume of aluminum eutectic alloy which fills the remainder of the original volume of the pit. As herein above referred to, the pit may have any geometric configuration which may be desired. For example, if a cylindrical or slightly frusto-conical pit having a depth of 3 mils and a diameter at the surface of 45 mils is used, the diameter of the frusto-conical section defined by the P-N junction is of the order of 48 mils at the surface and it has a depth of the order of 3 mils. Similarly, the frusto-conical section defined by the junction of the regrown crystal region and the aluminum-silicon eutectic alloy has a diameter at the surface of the order of 45 mils and a depth of 3 mils.

Although the above method has been described in connection with the fabrication of a single semiconductor translating body, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that a plurality of such semiconductor bodies may be produced upon a single semiconductor crystal which is then divided to yield a plurality of devices. For example, by utilizing a silicon wafer which is approximately one inch in diameter, forty pits may be formed in the surface of the silicon Wafer. The pits are regularly spaced upon the surface and are again of the order of 45 mils in diameter and 3 mils in depth. The pits are then filled with molten aluminum .and the entire surface of the wafer is covered as described hereinbefore. Thus, forty P-N junction regions within the single silicon wafer are formed. The wafer may then be divided to yield forty separate signal translating devices.

The present invention has been described in conjunction with the formation of a diode or a semiconductor translating body having a single P-N junction. However, the method may be used to particular advantage in the fabrication of other semiconductor devices, such as transistors. For example, referring to FIGS. 4 and 5, the formation of a fused junction transistor is illustrated schematically. Again using silicon as the semiconductor crystal and aluminum as the combined solvent metal and active impurtiy, there is shown in FIG. 4 a silicon body in which pits, or cavities, have been formed which will determine the configuration and depth of the collector and emitter fused P-N junctions. In this embodiment, a silicon crystal 30 having a square surface area 31 approximately /8 of an inch on a side and a thickness of the order of 15 mils is used. After the silicon wafer 30 has been etched and otherwise prepared, as described hereinbefore, a circular collector pit 33 of the order of 45 mils in diameter :at the surface 31 and '3 mils in depth is formed in the first surface 8 1 of the silicon wafer. An emitter pit 34 is formed symmetrically about the centerline of the collector pit 33 and has a diameter of the order of 25 miis at the second surface and a depth of the order of 3 mils. The bases of the pits are planar and parallel and separated by a predetermined thickness of the silicon wafer. Both pits are formed in this embodiment by sandblasting as described hereinbefore.

The silicon wafer is then placed in .an evacuated chamher with the first surface 31 upward and heated to a temperature of the order of 800 C. Aluminum is evaporated to deposit sufiicient aluminum to fill the collector pit 3'3 and cover the first surface 31 with a layer having a thickness of the order of 1 mil. The crystal is then cooled to form a P-type regrown collector region 35 (see FIG. 5) surrounding the aluminum-silicon alloy which now fills the collector pit 3-3 and covers the first surface 6-1. The second surface is then placed upward in the evacuated chamber Where it is heated to a temperature of the order of 800 C. Molten aluminum is deposited to fill the emitter pit 34 and cover the second surface 32 with a film of molten aluminum of the order of 1 mil in thickness. The silicon wafer is again cooled at a controlled cooling rate to form the second regrown P-type region 36 surrounding the emitter pit 34 which is now filled with aluminum-silicon alloy and covers the second surface 32. At 800 C. and using cavities of the volumes given, the regrown regions 35, '36 which are formed at the parallel bases of the cavities 33, 3 4 are of the order of 1 mil in thickness. Thus, referring to FIG. 5, an N-type base region '37 between the parallel collector and emitter junction regions 38, 39 is of the order of 3 mils in thickness. By controlling the depth of the pits and the temperature at which the molten solvent metal is deposited in the pits, the thickness of the base region may be accurately predetermined. Thus, emitter and collector P-N junctions in the transistor are accurately positioned Within the semiconductor body and are separated by a closely controlled base region.

The aluminum-silicon alloy 41, 42 and P- type regions 35, 36 at the surfaces 31, 3 2 are then removed from first and second surfaces by lapping or grinding as described hereinbefore to complete the transistor body as shown in FIG. 5. The surface of the transistor body then has a circular area of aluminum-silicon eutectic alloy 41 surrounded by a ring of P-type silicon 35 which forms a circular P-N junction 38 with the N-type surface 31 of the silicon body. Electrical connections (not shown) to the aluminum-silicon alloy regions 41, 42 are then made and the transistor body is encapsulated by methods well known to the art to yield a finished transistor.

Although a transistor having both collector and emitter junctions positioned at a depth from opposed surfaces of the semiconductor body has been described, it is advantageous for some transistor devices to have the collector P-N junction positioned within the semiconductor body while the emitter P-N junction is positioned at or near the opposed surface. It is sometimes desirable to form the collector junction by the method of the present embodiment and to form the emitter junction by wire fusion or by one of the methods known to the prior art to position it at the surface.

The method of making a single transistor has been described; however, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that a plurality of transistor bodies may be formed simultaneously, in a manner described hereinbefore, in connection with the fabrication of a plurality of diodes by forming a plurality of opposed collector and emitter regions in a single semiconductor wafer and then dividing the wafer to yield a plurality of finished transistor bodies. Thus, the method disclosed herein makes possible the production of fused P-N junctions in semiconductor devices which are accurately positioned and defined within the semiconductor body. In addition, the method of the present invention provides transistors in which the base region may be more accurately controlled in thickness and in physical location than has heretofore been possible in the prior art. The ability to predetermine and control the physical configuration and location of regrown crystal regions and P-N junctions in semiconductor crystal bodies in turn makes possible the production of semiconductor translating devices having electrical characteristics superior to those devices heretofore known to the art. Further, the method described herein lends itself to mass production techniques.

What is claimed is:

In a semiconductor translating device, a semiconductor crystal body of one conductivity type having at least one substantially planar surface, a volume of an alloy disposed within said semiconductor body and forming an area of alloy exposed at and lying in the plane of said surface of said body, said alloy being an alloy of solvent metal and the semiconductor material of said body, and a regrown crystal region disposed within said semiconductor body adjacent to and surrounding said volume of alloy and forming a first area adjacent said alloy and substantially parallel to said planar surface and a second area exposed at and lying in said planar surface, the di ameter of said first area being substantially greater than the thickness of said adjacent alloy, and the conductivity type of said regrown crystal region being opposite the conductivity type of said semiconductor body.

References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,750,542 Armstrong June 12, 1956 2,789,068 Maserjian Apr. 16, 1957 2,820,135 Yamakawa Jan. 14, 1958 2,829,992 Gudmundsen et al. Apr. 8, 1958 2,846,346 Bradley Aug. 5, 1958 2,850,413 Schmich Sept. 2, 1958 2,861,229 Pankove Nov. 18, 1958 2,894,862 Mueller July 14, 1959 

